Trump Does Another Lie Rolled on “I was Kidding" Wrapper



                                                                       



The babies and the big bad wolf:
Donald Trump booted a fussy baby from a rally Tuesday because the tot was wailing over the businessman’s speech“You can get the baby out of here,” the GOP presidential nominee barked from the stage in Ashburn, Va.
The baby banishment came just seconds after Trump bragged about his love of children and promised that the crying kid could stay.
“Don’t worry about that baby. I love babies," Trump said as the tot’s wailed interrupted a speech about trade imbalance, according to Politico. "Don’t worry about it. I love babies. I hear that baby crying, I like it. What a baby.
What a beautiful baby. Don’t worry, don’t worry. The mom’s running around like- don’t worry about it, you know. It’s young and beautiful and healthy and that’s
what we want.”
But when the baby kept crying, Trump abruptly Changed his tune.
“Actually I was kidding, You can get the baby Out of here”
His previously love for babies went the way of “I was kidding”
He does it so easy: Makes the statement  and then he doesn’t back tracks or say excuse me or I changed my mind. I had a change of heart. No he says (amI bad!)He said his love for the baby was “sarcasm”
His followers in the crowd which are the only ones you find now. The new and  curious looking for funny stuff are mainly gone buy now. The people there are the ones who drank the kook-aid  and they will all stay with him unless he takes one and kicks him in the ass which in case only one will be against him and the others will cheer him on and laugh like they did to the babies. They swallowed the change in personality from loving to monster like it was a stranded man out in the dessert looking for anything to satisfy his thirst, the quality, smell  or color of the water would not matter only to be liquid to be able to go down.
           Adam Gonzalez

Some good news for Hillary Clinton from the New York Times:

At the end of a series of tumultuous events and two political conventions, the presidential race is more or less where it was before it all began: Hillary Clinton has a clear lead.
All seven national surveys conducted since the Democratic convention show her ahead, by an average of nearly seven percentage points.
It’s a seven-point boost over where those same surveys showed the race after the Republican convention — enough to erase Donald Trump’s bounce and more. She is about three points ahead of where she was before the two conventions.
Convention bounces often prove to be short-lived, as the name implies and as Mr. Trump’s experience proves. Often, post-convention bounces don’t even reflect real changes in support — just changes in how likely people are to respond to a poll or to indicate their support for a candidate.
With that history in mind, Mrs. Clinton’s lead would be expected to fade a bit over the next few weeks. But her comfortable advantage in the post-convention polls suggests that her support can fade and that she can still maintain a clear lead.
There are also reasons to think that Mrs. Clinton’s bounce is likelier to stick than most. In general, convention bounces are most durable when they help unify the parties — something that’s largely inevitable and hard to undo.

Interactive Feature: Who Will Be President?
The latest CNN poll, which showed Mrs. Clinton ahead by nine points, suggests that she made her biggest gains among friendly groups, like young voters, supporters of Bernie Sanders and nonwhite voters. These gains could prove relatively durable. Notably, these gains have been enough to push Mrs. Clinton to 50 percent in three of the post-convention surveys.
Mrs. Clinton made gains among Republicans and white voters without a college degree, according to the CNN poll. But she’s still faring worse among those voters than the CNN poll has shown in the past, and even worse among white working-class voters than President Obama fared in pre-election polls from 2012.


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